Simple and relevant best known as the leading editing software company. Conceptual design at it's best. Great work, Brand Union.

And the Logo Played On: "

Avid Logo, Before and After




(Via Brand New.)



A sculpture to remind people to take the airport bus and save the emissions of 50 cars. Great idea and apparently it's created quite a buzz.

[from creativity-online] Acne Advertising created a sculpture from of 50 scrap cars to look like the airport shuttle service's coaches alongside the highway to a Swedish airport. Fifty cars represents how many fewer cars are on the road when one airport shuttle bus is full of passengers. The campaign website hosts a live feed from the installation and counts all the cars en route to the airport in the video. Counters exhibit the number of cars next to the equivalent number of buses that would be on the road if those car passengers had taken the shuttle service. via creativity-online

An electric car that was just announced by Chrysler. The specs seem to be more like a suped up golf cart than a real car but you can't help but smile at it... as it smiles back at you.

via Peapod

With the proposed alliance of Chrysler and Fiat, would there be melding of the car designs as well?

bo-rude:xlheads:gkojaxlabo:07042803.jpg: "

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(Via たんぶらうざ.)



Timeless and modern. Reminds me of old Japanese tapestries.

gkojaxlabo:(via tamjpn): "

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(Via たんぶらうざ.)



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I've noticed a lot of these ornamental retail structures in Japan. Has it caught on anywhere else?

(via expo7000): "

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(Via たんぶらうざ.)



The world lost an amazing photographer recently. I love this beautifully composed shot.

New York, 1980
(Photo: Copyright Estateof Helen Levitt/Laurence Miller Gallery, New York)

Helen Levitt, who died last week, at 95, made the life of the street come alive in her photographs. Pictures of children playing, standing on stoops in Spanish Harlem, or just lost in their own worlds vibrate with the secrets of existence, and the pleasures of the sidewalk. An American Henri Cartier-Bresson, she turned a world of strangers into our extended family.

via New York Magazine



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